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﻿﻿Keynote by renowned water authority and other events open to the public

Denver – Patricia Mulroy, general manager of the Southern Nevada Water Authority and renowned speaker on national water issues, will be the keynote speaker at the University of Colorado Law School’s Natural Resources Law Center 2011 Martz Summer Conference.

This keynote address begins the Center’s three-day conference, June 8-10, which will focus on current and future issues surrounding Colorado River management.

Mulroy’s keynote, titled “And then there was little to fight about. Can we get through the worst of times?” will be on June 8 at 5:30 p.m. in the Wolf Law Building at the University of Colorado. This keynote address is open to the public and admission is free.

As general manager of one of the country’s most progressive water agencies, Mulroy is exceptionally active in regional and national water issues. She currently serves on the Board of Directors of the Association of Metropolitan Water Agencies and the National Water Resources Association, and on the Board of Trustees of the Water Research Foundation. Additionally, she was the original chairperson of the Western Urban Water Coalition and served on the Colorado River Water Users Association’s board of directors.

In addition to the keynote address by Mulroy, there are two other events on June 8 which will be open to the public:

8:30 a.m. –1 p.m.: 261st Meeting of the Upper Colorado River Commission that will include reports from the Colorado River Salinity Control Forum, the Bureau of Reclamation, Western Area Power Administration, Fish and Wildlife Service, National Park Service, and the National Climate Center

2:00 p.m. – 4 p.m.: Colorado River Basin-Wide Federal Studies – An Update Multiple Federal agencies are conducting basin-wide studies that address potential climate variability and change in the Colorado River Basin. During this session, a select group of Federal program managers and technical specialists – including the Bureau of Land Management, US Geologic Survey, US Fish and Wildlife Service and the Bureau of Reclamation, will provide an overview of their activities and participate in an open panel/audience discussion on the commonalities, differences, and opportunities for collaboration among these studies.

The University of Colorado Law School (www.colorado.edu/law) was established in 1892 and is a charter member of the Association of American Law Schools, organized in 1901. The school has been on the American Bar Association's list of approved law schools since its first publication in 1923. Colorado Law advances the mission of the University and the greater legal community: through teaching, to employ robust theoretical inquiry, doctrinal and policy analysis, and professional skills and to integrate interdisciplinary study opportunities; through scholarship, to develop and test new ideas and approaches, to challenge the status quo, and to convey our research and ideas; and through public service, to contribute our time and talents in pursuit of our mission and to instill in our students an awareness of a lawyer’s civic responsibilities and opportunities to serve and lead. With its favorable faculty-to-student ratio, stellar bar-passage rate, outstanding student- and faculty profile, and low tuition cost, the University of Colorado Law School is one of the top law schools in the nation and the only public law school in Colorado.